National Association for Special Educational Needs

Nasen is the leading organisation in the United Kingdom which aims to promote the education, training, advancement and development of all those with special and additional support needs. The organisation provides advice, training and support to education professionals and its work on behalf of its members helps to inform special educational needs policy.[1][2]

NASEN
IndustryEducation
Founded1992
Headquarters
Tamworth
,
United Kingdom
Key people
Professor Adam Boddison (Chief Executive)
ServicesTraining and development of education professionals supporting those with special educational needs
Websitewww.nasen.org.uk

History

The organisation began in December 1991 when the National Association for Remedial Education (NARE) joined with the National Council for Special Education (NCSE) in order to create Nasen.[3] Nasen now operates at many levels and is open to all those who wish to advance the education of those with special needs.[4]

Activities

Nasen produces resources such as teaching programmes for special needs education and provides an advisory service to help inform policy on members' behalf. The charity also publishes a range of journals including the British Journal of Special Education, Support for Learning, Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, as well as the education magazine Special.[4]

Nasen runs events and conferences that are focused on developing the professional skills and practices that are needed for working with children and young people with special and additional educational needs and disabilities. The annual Nasen Live offers targeted CPD seminars and helps educators keep abreast of policy changes and changes to schools' statutory responsibilities.[5] In 2017, Nasen's Chief Executive, Dr Adam Boddison, replaced the long-standing 'Special' magazine, with the more modern 'nasen Connect'.

In 2018, nasen acquired the Whole School SEND consortium from London Leadership Strategy and Dr Adam Boddison was appointed as Chair of the consortium.

Structure

A Board of Trustees govern the affairs of the Association in line with the powers expressed in the Memorandum and Articles of the Association. The Trustees delegate the day-to-day business of the Association to the Chief Executive Officer.

Nasen's Advisory Groups have the responsibility of providing sector-specific intelligence and support to the Trustees and the CEO to ensure the aims and objects of the Association are fully achieved in line with the Strategic Plan.

gollark: Getting up early is annoying especially with my 45-minute commute.
gollark: I would much þreφer that to my sqool.
gollark: _finds Discord's commands very stupid_
gollark: (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
gollark: Go LLVM yourself.

References

  1. "Charity overview". Charitycommission.gov.uk. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  2. Farrell, Michael (2012). "Special education: Addresses". The Special Education Handbook: An A-Z Guide. Routledge. p. 269. ISBN 9780415490191.
  3. Bines, Hazel (1993). "Curriculum Change: The Case of Special Education". British Journal of Sociology of Education. 14 (1): 75–90. JSTOR 1392980.
  4. "about nasen". Nasen.org.uk. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  5. "professional development". Nasen.org.uk. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.